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1

McGlashan, Thomas H. Schizophrenia: Treatment process and outcome. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press, 1989.

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2

Engaging boys in treatment: Creative approaches to the therapy process. New York: Brunner-Routledge, 2010.

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3

W, Finney John, and Cronkite Ruth C, eds. Alcoholism treatment: Context, process, and outcome. New York: Oxford University Press, 1990.

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4

Association, American Counseling, ed. Treatment strategies for substance and process addictions. Alexandria, VA: American Counseling Association, 2015.

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5

Mckay, Sinead. Treatment process and outcome: Cognitive-behavioural therapy for anxiety disorders in a clinical sample. (s.l: The Author), 2000.

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6

The solution group: Positive change through the group process. Chapel Hill: New View Publications, 1993.

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7

Marsh, Alison. Addiction counselling: Content and process. East Hawthorn, Victoria: IP Communications, 2013.

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8

1950-, Coffey Margaret S., Hersch Gayle Ilene, and Lamport Nancy K. 1931-, eds. Activity analysis & application: Building blocks of treatment. 3rd ed. Thorofare, NJ: Slack Inc., 1996.

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9

Khantzian, Edward J. Treating addiction as a human process. Northvale, N.J: Jason Aronson, 1999.

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10

Bypassing bypass: The new technique of chelation therapy : a non-surgical treatment for improving circulation and slowing the aging process. 2nd ed. Trout Dale, VA: Medex Publishers, 1996.

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11

Cranton, Elmer M. Bypassing bypass: The new technique of chelation therapy : a non-surgical treatment for improving circulation and slowing the aging process. 2nd ed. [Trout Dale, Va.?]: Hampton Roads Pub. Co., 1994.

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12

Transforming hate to love: An outcome study of the Peper Harow treatment process for adolescents. London: Routledge, 1997.

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13

Eklund, Mona. Occupational group therapy in a psychiatric day care unit for long-term mentally ill patients: Ward atmosphere, treatment process, and outcome. Lund: Department of Psychology, Lund University, 1996.

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14

E, Gfeller Kate, and Thaut Michael H, eds. An introduction to music therapy: Theory and practice. Dubuque, IA: Wm. C. Brown Publishers, 1992.

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15

E, Gfeller Kate, and Thaut Michael H, eds. An introduction to music therapy: Theory and practice. 2nd ed. Boston, Mass: McGraw-Hill, 1999.

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16

Evaluating treatment environments: The quality of psychiatric and substance abuse programs. 2nd ed. New Brunswick, N.J., U.S.A: Transaction Publishers, 1997.

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17

Silverskiöld, W. The Silfvershield method: A radically new ultrashort psychotherapy based on the discovery of the process of emotion-extinction : the therapy generally effects total and lasting elimination of harmful permanent emotions, the pain of traumatic memories normally in one single session. Halmstad, Sweden: Magnus Stenbocks, 1994.

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18

Smith, Mary Lee. The benefits of psychotherapy. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996.

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19

Silverskiöld, W. EMDR and EE, the Silfvershield method II (emotion eradication): A radically new ultrashort psychotherapy based on the discovery of the process of emotion-extinction : the therapy generally effects total and lasting elimination of harmful permanent emotions, the pain of traumatic memories normally in one single session : added, a translation in English of an internet publication in Swedish 2001 by the author. 2nd ed. Halmstad, Sweden: Magnus Stenbocks, 2003.

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20

Scrimali, Tullio. Neuroscience-based cognitive therapy: New methods for assessment, treatment, and self-regulation. Chichester, West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons, 2012.

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21

J, Bairstow Phillip, ed. Perceptual motor behaviour: Developmental assessment and therapy. New York: Praeger, 1985.

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22

Laszlo, Judith I. Perceptual-motor behaviour: Developmental assessment and therapy. London: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1985.

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23

B, Thomas Rhiannon, ed. Empathy in the treatment of trauma and PTSD. New York: Brunner-Routledge, 2004.

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24

Plakun, Eric M. Treatment resistance and patient authority: The Austen Riggs reader. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2011.

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25

Gordon, Laurel Bonnie. Client perceptual processing in cognitive behavioural therapy and process-experiential therapy for depression. 2007.

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26

J, Lettieri Dan, Sayers Mollie, Nelson Jack E, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (U.S.), and METROTEC Inc, eds. Summaries of alcoholism treatment assessment research. Rockville, Md: U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Administration, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, 1985.

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27

1951-, Kantor Jerry S., ed. Clinical depression during addiction recovery: Process, diagnosis, and treatment. New York: M. Dekker, 1996.

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28

Kivlighan III, D. Martin, and Dennis M. Kivlighan. Treatment Modalities. Edited by Sara Maltzman. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199739134.013.28.

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In the first part of this chapter the focus is on research comparing the effectiveness (i.e., psychotherapy outcomes) of various treatment modalities: individual, group, couple, and family therapies. In the second section the discussion shifts to focus on research that examines therapy process similarities and differences across the various treatment modalities. The chapter includes a review of the research literature comparing individual, group, couple, and family treatments. Although there are numerous studies comparing treatment approaches (e.g., cognitive behavior therapy vs. psychodynamic therapy), far fewer studies have compared treatment modalities. For treatment outcome differences, a number of meta-analyses examining similarities and differences across treatment modalities are reviewed, summarized, and critiqued. Exploring differences in therapeutic processes involved reviewing, summarizing, and critiquing studies that examined similarities and differences in the character of the therapeutic alliance, helpful events, and therapist behaviors and techniques. The chapter concludes with recommendations for future research. Two major approaches to new research are recommended: focus on treatment goals and systemic processes and an increased focus on the therapeutic processes that cut across and differentiate the treatment modalities
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29

Pia, Glas-Greenwalt, ed. Fibrinolysis in disease: The malignant process, interventions in thrombogenic mechanisms and novel treatment modalities. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 1995.

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30

M, Berlin Richard, ed. Poets on Prozac: Mental illness, treatment, and the creative process. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008.

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31

Myra, Kersner, and Wright Jannet A, eds. Speech and language therapy: The decision-making process when working with children. London: David Fulton, 2001.

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32

Le Grange, Daniel, and Renee Rienecke. Family Therapy. Edited by W. Stewart Agras and Athena Robinson. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190620998.013.17.

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Family therapy is increasingly recommended as the treatment of choice for eating disorders among adolescents. The shift from blaming parents for causing an ED to seeing them as a necessary part of the recovery process was set in motion by Salvador Minuchin and colleagues, and then reinforced and expanded on by researchers at the Maudsley Hospital in London, UK, and in the United States and Australia. Data supporting the efficacy of family therapy for adolescent anorexia nervosa has been solidified, while family-based approaches in the treatment of adolescents with bulimia nervosa show promise. Further research is needed to replicate the findings of existing studies and to further clarify the utility of parental involvement in the treatment of older adolescents, or transition age youth, with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa.
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33

Cancer care quality measures: Diagnosis and treatment of colorectal cancer. Rockville, MD: U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2006.

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34

Grove, David R., Gilbert J. Greene, and Mo Yee Lee. Family Therapy for Treating Trauma. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190059408.001.0001.

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Family Therapy for Trauma: An Integrative Family and Systems Treatment (I-FAST) Approach offers a stand-alone family therapy treatment approach for trauma, addressing a gap in the trauma treatment literature. The book outlines a flexible yet structured family therapy approach that can integrate intervention procedures from any of the evidence-based manualized trauma treatments into a family treatment framework. The authors show how this flexibility offers great advantages for engaging trauma survivors and their families into treatment, who otherwise would not cooperate with standard trauma treatment approaches. They show how tracking and utilizing client and family frames in the organizing of treatment enhances both family engagement and the healing process in general. We show the role of family interactional patterns in the perpetuation of trauma symptoms and how changing these patterns leads to the resolution of trauma symptoms. The book demonstrates how tracking and enlarging interactional exceptions plays a key role in overcoming problems related to trauma. For clients who are not interested in trauma treatment, the authors show how treatment focusing on whatever issue they are willing to address can simultaneously resolve their trauma symptoms.
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35

Cranton, Elmer M. D., Arline Brecher, and James P. Frackelton. Bypassing Bypass: The New Technique of Chelation Therapy, a Non-Surgical Treatment for Improving Circulation and Slowing the Aging Process. 2nd ed. Hampton Roads Publishing Co., 1990.

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36

Cranton, Elmer M. Bypassing Bypass Surgery: Chelation Therapy: A Non-Surgical Treatment for Reversing Arteriosclersis, Improving Blocked Circulation, and Slowing the Aging Process. Hampton Roads Publishing Company, 2001.

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37

David, Talley J., Mauldin Patrick D, and Becker Edmund R, eds. Cost effective diagnosis and treatment of coronary artery disease. Baltimore, MD: Williams & Wilkins, 1997.

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38

Gossett, John T., and Steven M., M.D. Mirin. Psychiatric Treatment: Advances in Outcome Research. American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc., 1991.

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39

1942-, Mirin Steven M., Gossett John T. 1937-, and Grob Mollie C, eds. Psychiatric treatment: Advances in outcome research. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press, 1991.

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40

Mee, Sarah, and Zoe Clift. Hand Therapy. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198757689.003.0002.

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Rehabilitation is a multidisciplinary, patient-centred, evidence-based process to promote healing, restore function, and promote independence. The physical and psychological and social consequences of the hand condition or injury have to be considered. Mobilization can be active or passive, supplemented by accessory movements and proprioceptive rehabilitation. Splinting may be static, serial static, static progressive, dynamic. Many materials are available. Oedema may be acute or chronic; it is treated with elevation, active movement, retrograde massage, compression, kinesiotaping, cold therapy, and contrast bathing. Scars may be mature or immature; keloid or hypertrophic. Management is generally empiric: massage, silicone, pressure therapy, steroid injections, and surgery all have roles. Hypersensitivity (allodynia, causalgia, dysaesthesia, hyperpathia, etc.) is treated with desensitization, graded textures, percussion, and mirror visual feedback. Stiffness is managed especially by prevention; movement, splinting, and surgery have a role. Pain is treated with medication, oedema control, acupuncture, TENS, education, psychological measures. Complex Regional Pain Syndrome has sensory, vasomotor, sudomotor, and trophic elements. Treatment includes medication, hand therapy, and occasionally surgery.
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41

Weiner, Mark A., and Herbert L. Malinoff. Revising the Treatment Plan and/or Ending Pain Treatment (DRAFT). Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190265366.003.0018.

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This chapter describes specifically the population with chronic non-malignant pain whose illness is described as “opioid treatment failures,” perhaps 75% of the total. It addresses one of the most difficult questions in the management of comorbid pain and addiction: termination of opioid therapy. It begins by defining the problem for each patient in terms of strata of risk, and then describes the opioid discontinuation process in both outpatient medical offices and hospital settings. Timelines for discontinuation, including of benzodiazepines, are discussed, as well as the place of buprenorphine during taper or withdrawal. Both the fear of abandonment and the requirement for long-term aftercare are addressed, consistent with psychosocial principles generally accepted for the management of all chronic conditions.
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42

Thuraisingham, Raj, and Cormac Breen. Modality selection for renal replacement therapy. Edited by David J. Goldsmith. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199592548.003.0141.

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The choice of treatment for end-stage kidney disease is an important one for patients. Ideally this should happen as a coordinated process over a period of time, supported by education and individualized treatment planning discussions to assist the patient in making an informed choice about their treatment. In this setting, patients suitable for transplantation may select this treatment modality and potentially, especially if there is a living kidney donor, be transplanted before the need for dialysis. Other patients may choose between dialysis modalities, between home and in-centre treatment, or in some cases between active dialysis treatment and conservative kidney care. A smaller proportion of patients may present with the urgent need to start dialysis, the crash-lander pathway. In this situation initial treatment planning and choice is more limited, treatment is more often determined by institutional practice, and treatment choice and formation of definitive dialysis access are achieved at a later date.
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43

Rasmussen, Jessica, Angelina F. Gómez, and Sabine Wilhelm. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Body Dysmorphic Disorder. Edited by Katharine A. Phillips. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190254131.003.0026.

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Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) that is tailored to the unique clinical features of body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) is currently the psychosocial treatment of choice for BDD. Researchers have made great strides in understanding the cognitive-behavioral processes that contribute to the development and maintenance of BDD. CBT for BDD is based on this theoretical understanding and has been shown to be highly effective in reducing BDD symptom severity and associated symptoms. The key components of CBT include identifying and rationally disputing maladaptive appearance-related thoughts, and exposure with response prevention for feared and avoided situations. CBT for BDD also integrates educating the patient on the mental and behavioral processes involved in the BDD experience with mindfulness/perceptual retraining (e.g., techniques aimed at helping patients to view their appearance with a neutral, global, and aware perspective) to augment the therapeutic process. Advanced cognitive strategies are used to address negative core beliefs. Because BDD is typically characterized by poor or absent insight, motivational interviewing is often needed to overcome ambivalence towards treatment.
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44

Hurt-Thaut, Corene. Clinical practice in music therapy. Edited by Susan Hallam, Ian Cross, and Michael Thaut. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199298457.013.0047.

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The field of music therapy has grown substantially since it was founded in 1950. The advances in research and medical knowledge continue to help explain the therapeutic effects of music on behaviour based on scientific evidence, providing the framework to systematically and creatively transform musical responses into therapeutic responses. This article begins with descriptions of music therapy and the music therapy treatment process. It then discusses the application of music therapy to clinical populations and music therapy in neurological rehabilitation.
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45

M, Tims Frank, ed. The effectiveness of innovative approaches in the treatment of drug abuse. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press, 1997.

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46

Foa, Edna, Elizabeth A. Hembree, Barbara Olasov Rothbaum, and Sheila Rauch. Prolonged Exposure Therapy for PTSD. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med-psych/9780190926939.001.0001.

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This therapist guide of prolonged exposure (PE) treatment is accompanied by the patient workbook, Reclaiming Your Life from a Traumatic Experience. The treatment and manuals are designed for use by a therapist who is familiar with cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and who has undergone an intensive training workshop for prolonged exposure by experts in this therapy. The therapist guide instructs therapists to implement this brief CBT program that targets individuals who are diagnosed with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or who manifest PTSD symptoms that cause distress and/or dysfunction following various types of trauma. The overall aim of the treatment is to help trauma survivors emotionally process their traumatic experiences to diminish or eliminate PTSD and other trauma-related symptoms. The term prolonged exposure (PE) reflects the fact that the treatment program emerged from the long tradition of exposure therapy for anxiety disorders in which patients are helped to confront safe but anxiety-evoking situations to overcome their unrealistic, excessive fear and anxiety. At the same time, PE has emerged from the adaption and extension of Emotional Processing Theory (EPT) to PTSD, which emphasizes the central role of successfully processing the traumatic memory in the amelioration of PTSD symptoms. Throughout this guide, the authors highlight that emotional processing is the mechanism underlying successful reduction of PTSD symptoms.
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47

Thaut, Michael H., William B. Davis, and Kate E. Gfeller. An Introduction To Music Therapy: Theory and Practice. 2nd ed. McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages, 1998.

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48

Jacobs, MaryLynn A., and Noelle M. Austin. Splinting the Hand and Upper Extremity: Principles and Process. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2002.

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49

MaryLynn, Jacobs, and Austin Noelle, eds. Splinting the hand and upper extremity: Principles and process. Baltimore, Md: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2003.

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50

Outcome Measurements in Cardiovascular Medicine. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 1999.

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